by Colleen Carroll Campbell
There I was, bleary-eyed after another night of round-the-clock feedings and struggling to balance the morning's newspaper on my lap as I nursed two squirming infants, when I read the latest rap on stay-at-home mothers.

Rating: 5.0/5


by Carla Galdo
Being a "stay-at-home mom" is a relatively new thing for me. I've only been home full time for about two years. My former life involved spending twenty-plus years out of the home, receiving a formal education, much of which never mentioned what one does when one is "at home", or, for that matter, that there is any value whatsoever in "home."

Rating: 5.0/5


Something tells me that the legendary Proverbs 31 woman was not in her child-bearing years. At the very least, we may presume that she was not in the early stages of a pregnancy. Having slogged through the first trimesters of two pregnancies at this point, I can attest that there is not a pregnant woman alive who can manage even this verse out of the 31st chapter of Proverbs on a daily basis during the first three and a half months of pregnancy. Of course, that doesn't mean that pregnant women do not watch over the affairs of their homes or that they are perpetually idle, but the fatigue and nausea of early pregnancy are a colossal hindrance to the daily tasks of running a household.

Rating: 5.0/5